Swifts Can Fly for Up to 10 Months

Common swifts have always been admired for their flying abilities, and it seems there is more to them than just an aerodynamic body and tremendous speed.

Based on the latest findings, it seems that these little birds can spend ten months in the air without landing. Experts underline that there is no bird capable of doing that besides the swifts. According to biologist Anders Hedestrom from the Sweden Lund University and lead author of the latest study, ‘It’s the most extreme example [of nonstop flight] that we know of.’

Swifts are More Than Just Fast

He continues by comparing common swifts with greyhounds, thanks to their body shape and flying speed. Hedenstrom’s team conducted a two-year survey by tracking 13 specimens using small accelerometers and light sensors which were put in tiny backpacks attached to the swifts.

This way, they could know the exact position of the birds, while they also tracked the wings’ beating and the forward movement’s speed, so researchers were able to calculate the exact distance the birds traveled and how much time they spent in the air.

At the end of the survey, they found out that common swifts fly for ten months every year between Northern Europe and Central Africa, meaning that they spend 99.5 percent of their journey on the sky.

What is even more fascinating is that during their migration they stopped just for maximum two hours on a tree branch. Scientists were even more puzzled by the fact that three swifts never stopped flying until the end of the migration. Instead, they spent over 10,000 miles in the air.

Although frigatebirds were known to fly long distances when they crossed oceans, not even them can compare with the common swift, who established a new world record. Because they travel such a long distance, these birds have to mate, eat, and drink while flying.

Hedenstrom says that these birds most likely sleep in the air as well. Another interesting fact is that the birds have very short legs, and that is why in the past, people thought that they don’t have legs at all.

The team will continue their research to find out more about common swifts and to understand how they can fly for such long distances, even if this process usually takes a high amount of energy.

About Cliff Jenkins Scott

Cliff likes to describe himself as made for the hard road. Freelancing is taking off across the world. And yet, valuable opportunities are hard to find he thinks, particularly when it comes to writing.
After graduating with an MA degree in Communication as a major and Technology and Writing as minors, Cliff decided to give his own website hosting creative writing a boost and engage in an overwhelming number of projects, all of them focused on writing. He didn’t look for a quick burnout, but his eagerness to learn as much as possible as rapidly as possible kept him going.